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Solve : Buying Graphics Card Help? |
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Answer» I'm looking to purchase a new graphics card, unfortunately I'm not up on the graphics cards scene for gaming. So I was wondering if anyone could give me some tips or buying advice on what I could get for £150 - £200 that would be able to run the latest games, or for another comparison Oblivion on medium. Well for less then 200 euro I am sure you could get a Nvidia 7900GS which is a good chunk better then the 7600GT for only a few bucks more.Check the link in my reply #5 - X1950 series is there, better than the 7900 series. ATi's R600, their first DX10 chips, are out soon, and nVidia's DX10 cards are already out - 8800 series - but are very expensive, around £350 upwards.Thats why I said to wait 3 months, I think in 3 months you will be able to get a far better card for 200 euro then you can today. Possibly a direct X 10 card which we will all need one day anyway.If you ever wait to buy, you'll wait forever, because the NEXT big thing will always be just around the corner. Prices will continue to come down, but that's true of all hardware - you can get a much better card for the same price now than last year, and next year you'll be able to get a much better card for the price than now. We won't all need a DX10 card unless you have Vista and want to play games which don't support running in DX9 mode. It'd be nice to have one, but not completely necessary.Thanks guys. I have no preference between ATI or nVidia and yes my PSU is definately powerful enough to handle just about anything. Also I am planning on eventually upgrading to a dual card system would you reccommend SLI or CROSSFIRE.SLI or Crossfire depends on whether you have ATi or nVidia cards. Each has advantages and disadvantages, but neither has a clear lead over the other. If it was me, I'd decide on the card and worry about dual card solutions later. SLI on Wikipedia. Crossfire on Wikipedia. Hopefully those articles will explain more. From what I can remember, prior to the X1950 series you needed a special Crossfire edition card for Crossfire. These are notoriously hard to find and can be expensive, so I'd recommend an X1950 series card if you go with ATi and you want Crossfire. Edit: the articles explain the advantages and disadvantages of each compared to the other, including master cards etc. So I'll leave it to Wikipedia to explain it.Yeah for Crossfire you need, or at least needed, a Crossfire master card. I had read that with Crossfire there were slightly more and better options for the graphics split. But thankyou I think I have found the card that I'm going to go with. If LIKE you said the Radeon X1950 XT can be used along with another of the same kind in Crossfire mode then that's the one I'm going to go for. After some research it would appear that the X1950 XT still needs a master card which retail at about £250, that was for the X1950 XT-X on Overclockers.co.uk THOUGH. |
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